Post on 22-Nov-2021
transcript
Genesis of UROC
• What is the University’s Urban Agenda?
• How does the University think differently about its
role as an urban serving university?
• How could this role transform the University in how
we work with communities?
UROC Signature Projects (Direct
Engagement)
• Health
• Trauma Recovery Project (Bush Innovation)
• Juvenile Sex Trafficking (Women’s Foundation)
• Economic Development
• Northside Job Creation Team (Minneapolis Foundation)
• Education
• Prepare 2Nspire
UROC Affiliated Projects (Catalyzing
Engagement)
•60+ University-Community partnerships involving 35+
academic programs and 40 community organizations.
•50+ graduate and undergraduate University students employed
in work ranging from data collection to literature review
•400+ participants each year in UROC's Critical Conversation
discussion series.
UROC Outreach/Engagement
•Publically shared space
•Art gallery and hospitality station
•Community Affairs Committee and
UMN Engagement Zone work
•Good neighbor and trust building in the community
• More than 2,050 visitors each month
UROC Principles
✓Partnership
✓Mutual Benefit
✓Transformation
▪ Multiple ways of knowing
▪ Different ways of doing
✓Transparency
✓Dissemination (creative and ongoing)
✓Action and Follow-through
Research Agenda
• Community Healing and Wholeness
• Systems and Systemic Racism
• Individual, Family and Community Financial Well Being
UROC Research over the next five years
Freeway and other Factors
• Frogtown Green Line Development
– Rhondo and 94
• Sears Closes 1994
– Midtown Global Market 2006
• Upper Harbor Terminal
– A NEW OPPORTUNITY
1937 2018 (adjusted for inflation)
Avg Home Value $2,000 $36,420
Total Value of Current Vacant Lots $1,464,000 $26,659,235
Value/Acre $12,960 $235,994
1937 Home Value x 732 Vacant Lots = Missing Value
$30 Million in Taxes Over 82 Years Lost
Source: Wyandotte Unified Government
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Capital Investment Impacts
• Communities that invest in mixed-use, walkable downtowns, centers, and
neighborhoods provide economic advantages for individuals and
businesses, and strengthen their tax base.
• Individuals benefit because jobs are created when neighborhoods
revitalize and household budgets are improved by rising walkability.
Capital Investment Impacts
• Businesses benefit because placemaking is a primary driver of
investment, according to Urban Land Institute scholar Edward McMahon.
In today's economy, the quality of place is paramount, he says.
"Decisions such as where to invest, where to work, where to retire, and
where to vacation are all made based on what a community looks like,"
he explains. "In a world where capital is footloose, if you can't differentiate
[your town] from any other, you have no competitive advantage.”
Capital Investment Impacts
• Evidence of “place” value can be found in Walk Score, where real estate
broker Redfin found that a one point increase translates to an average
$3,000 rise in house value nationwide. Neighborhoods with high Walk
Scores correlate with unique character and high quality of life, and feature
appealing streets and public spaces.
Capital Investment Impacts
• Compact central business district properties yield 10 times more tax
revenue per acre than conventional suburban development, according
to Building Better Budgets: A National Examination of the Fiscal Benefits
of Smart Growth Development. “When you do the math, it is easy to see
that dense downtown development returns a greater investment to the
community than putting tax dollars towards sprawl,” says Joe Minicozzi of
Urban3, a firm that has analyzed patterns of tax return in metro areas
nationwide.